A Snitch is a Bitch

Besides, Cam prolly didn't even get a good look at the culprit, being preoccupied with both speeding his Lambo through city traffic without totalling it and simultaneously trying not to shit his Sean John ensemble and butter soft, Ricarro seats. After all, you don't want to smell all shitty when you arrive at the emergency room, nor want to have to explain the dung smell when you get your Lambo detailed now, do you?
Who Shot Cam'ron?
The
By Del Quentin Wilber and Stephen A. Crockett Jr.
Friday,
The crime should be easy to solve: A blinged-out rap star is shot in his royal blue $250,000 Lamborghini on a busy
But the police say their investigation is stalled for one maddening reason. The victim -- platinum-selling
"
Snitch? Never. He'd lose all street cred. His rivals would pounce, his CD sales would crash, his cologne and liquor sales would dry up, the game would be over.
It's a familiar but frustrating refrain that police hear every day from shooting victims in some of the city's toughest neighborhoods.
"We need the cooperation of witnesses and victims," said D.C. Police Chief Charles H. Ramsey. "I can't relate to that mentality. I can't comment on that thought process. I don't think much of it. I don't see the logic at all."
The police are so fed up that they're looking for ways to force the issue. Turns out, Cam'ron's on five years' probation for a gun conviction in
Who Shot Killa'
Some even argue that Cam'ron staged the attack -- that it was nothing more than a publicity stunt.
Any way it shakes out, one thing seems sure: Getting shot means more street cred for
The Shooting
This is what police do know:
The 29-year-old rapper was in town Saturday, Oct. 22, to promote the forthcoming release of Juelz Santana's second album, "What the Game's Been Missing."
That night, Cam'ron and his entourage hit the trendy H20 nightclub on
But Cam'ron and his 30-member entourage were stopped at H2O's door. Some of them were wearing T-shirts, jerseys and jeans -- not up to the club's dress code. So Cam'ron and a friend left in his Lamborghini -- a 2006 Gallardo that has been featured in a music video and his publicity photos. Some in the group followed in the pink Range Rover.
At
Cam'ron and his friends weren't the only ones to see it happen. So did an officer with D.C. Protective Services, an agency that protects District government property. He was at the intersection, too -- in a marked police car.
Cam'ron was hit in both arms but was able to speed off. The gunman jumped back into the Expedition, and the driver hit the gas, but they crashed into a parked car and a house in the 600 block of
Police later searched the Expedition and turned up fingerprints, a Nextel phone and shell casings. They also found a .45-caliber handgun in a nearby alley. Investigators tracked down the Expedition's owner, but the trail did not end there; the owner apparently rented the SUV to someone else, and police are having trouble establishing who was using it that night.
Cam'ron was treated at
He stood outside the hospital touching the $200,000 worth of jewelry around his neck and proclaimed: "They didn't get anything; I still got my car and my jewelry." He made other boasts: "I didn't give up the car because I paid $250,000 for it. I won't just give up anything to anybody because they're waving a gun around." And: "I roll with the punches. The people who did it was real sloppy."
Was he mad at D.C.? "I love D.C." Cam'ron proclaimed. "This could have happened in
Cam'ron's publicity department went into overdrive. It put out a news release reassuring everyone that "Cam'ron will be just fine." And while it was at it, the PR team made sure to plug the release in February of what it called "Cam'ron's next highly anticipated album and feature film, KILLA SEASON."
Through his publicists, Cam'ron declined several requests to be interviewed for this story.
A few days after the gunfire, he was on a
Brash Beginnings
Even in the excess-driven rap world, Cam'ron is known for being gaudy. Liberace gaudy. He wears royal blue fur hats, matching waist-length fur coats and pink polos. Gold necklaces, chains and diamonds dangle from his neck. On MTV, he has compared himself to Malcolm X and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. -- just the kind of brashness that creates a buzz.
He has his own record label, Diplomat Records, and plans for a clothing line. He markets his own liquor, SIZZURP, a cognac-based purple punch, and cologne, "Oh Boy." And he is directing the movie "Killa Season," which his publicists say will trace his self-proclaimed "rise to the King of Harlem."
It's quite a story. Before he got into rap, Cameron Giles was a standout basketball player at his high school in
He reportedly had basketball scholarship offers from colleges but didn't have the grades. He dropped out of high school in 1994 and hustled on the street, according to associates and news reports. But basketball remained a passion. He got his GED, and hoped to make a comeback at a junior college in
Back in New York, Cam'ron hooked up with a buddy from his high school basketball team, Mason Bethea, who had become a prominent rapper known as Ma$e. Ma$e introduced Cam'ron in early 1997 to Biggie Smalls, the Notorious B.I.G., giving Cam'ron his first huge break.
Smalls was so impressed with the young rapper that he helped get one of Cam'ron's songs, "Crush on You," onto an album by Lil' Kim. The rap, performed by Lil' Kim and Lil' Cease, was a hit.
Soon Cam'ron was rapping on his own. His debut album, "Confessions of Fire," sold 600,000 copies. His second, "Sports, Drugs and Entertainment," sold a half-million. In 2002, he went platinum, selling more than 1 million copies of "Come Home With Me."
As his career rocketed, Cam'ron formed a loose-knit group of rappers, known as the Diplomats, or the Dipset, that often collaborated on albums.
** With success came more trouble.
Biggie Smalls was slain in 1997. Another of Cam'ron's mentors, a rapper named Big L, was gunned down outside his
That same year, someone on Cam'ron's tour bus was alleged to have fired shots at three women in a car on a
Cam'ron got busted, too. In 2002, he was arrested on gun and drug charges. He pleaded guilty to weapons charges in that case in February and got probation.
All of it fed the music. The Diplomats released a mix tape called "Who Shot Freaky Zeaky?" Cam'ron laced his songs with expletives and descriptions of killing, guns, sex and drugs. Titles included "More Gangsta Music," "Get 'em Girls" and "Dead or Alive."
Cam'ron has recently gotten spreads in magazines including VIBE and the Source. Only last weekend the Diplomats were named the best rap group of the year at the VIBE Awards.
"He is one of those rappers who has ears for the street," said Erik Parker, VIBE's music editor.
Motive Unclear
Police say that they're looking at a potential suspect in the shooting but that, without Cam'ron's help, the case will probably go nowhere. The motive remains a mystery. So with the police chasing Cam'ron and Cam'ron chasing fame, his friends and fans are trying to sort out what happened.
Juelz Santana said the gunman might have been jealous of Killa Cam's success.
"There are all these people who love us and respect our gangster," he said. "But there are people who want to test our gangster. . . . Some people hate to see you on top."
At Howard, students are wondering whether Cam'ron was asking for trouble that weekend in the District.
"A lot of people thought that he was really stupid driving a Lamborghini in D.C. This isn't
Her view was shared by Brian "Fatboy" Young and Derek "Chill" Rogers, hip-hop deejays who said Cam'ron's flamboyant ways might have ticked someone off.
"Truthfully, I think he forgot where he was," said Young, a Howard freshman. "This is D.C. It was definitely a carjacking."
"Yeah, he was probably showing off," said Rogers, a sophomore.
"But this is definitely going to help his sales," Young said.
Staff researcher Bobbye Pratt contributed to this report.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/17/AR2005111702119.html?sub=new


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